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Schmid, Günther
Working Paper
Youth unemployment in India: From a European andtransitional labour market point of view
IZA Policy Paper, No. 95
Provided in Cooperation with:IZA – Institute of Labor Economics
Suggested Citation: Schmid, Günther (2015) : Youth unemployment in India: From a Europeanand transitional labour market point of view, IZA Policy Paper, No. 95, Institute for the Study ofLabor (IZA), Bonn
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IZA Policy Paper No. 95
Youth Unemployment in India: From a European and Transitional Labour Market Point of View
Günther Schmid
January 2015
Youth Unemployment in India:
From a European and Transitional Labour Market Point of View
Günther Schmid Berlin Social Science Centre (WZB)
and IZA
Policy Paper No. 95 January 2015
IZA
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Germany
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The IZA Policy Paper Series publishes work by IZA staff and network members with immediate relevance for policymakers. Any opinions and views on policy expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of IZA. The papers often represent preliminary work and are circulated to encourage discussion. Citation of such a paper should account for its provisional character. A revised version may be available directly from the corresponding author.
IZA Policy Paper No. 95 January 2015
ABSTRACT
Youth Unemployment in India: From a European and Transitional Labour Market Point of View1
This essay first sketches some descriptive material, setting the stage and demonstrating the highly differentiated statistical landscape of various measures for youth unemployment in Europe compared to India and in particular to Germany. Second, it provides a simple but powerful model for the main causes of youth unemployment from which general policy strategies can be derived and illustrated by good practice examples from Europe, in particular Germany. Third, because a large part of the problem is structural, requiring long-term solutions, possible immediate measures to mitigate the severe long-term scar effects for the unemployed youth are briefly reviewed. Large differences of unemployment performance among European countries reveal, for instance, the importance of automatic stabilisers like unemployment insurance in order to counteract the tendency of market economies to put most of the burden of adjustment in times of recession on youth. The fourth and main part, however, is devoted to possible lessons for India from Europe, in particular from countries with low youth unemployment like Austria, Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands. The theoretical framework for these lessons is taken from the concept of Transitional Labour Markets (TLM) which emphasises dual learning systems as an institutional device both for fair intergenerational risk sharing as well as for smooth transitions from school to work. JEL Classification: E24, I24, J64 Keywords: youth unemployment, education, vocational training, labour market policy,
transitional labour markets, risk sharing Corresponding author: Günther Schmid Berlin Social Science Centre (WZB) Reichpietschufer 50 D-10785 Berlin Germany E-mail: [email protected]
1 Paper prepared for the International Conference “Jobs for Development: Challenges and Solutions” organised by the World Bank Group and the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER), New Delhi, 1–2 December 2014. I am very grateful to Jackie O’Reilly for encouraging comments, to Jutta Höhne for assistance in organising Figures 1A and 2A, to Christian Brzinsky-Fay for allowing using the Figures 4A, 5A, and 6A, and to Jennifer Rontganger for editorial help.
2
Youth Unemployment in India: From a European and Transitional Labour Market Point of View
Günther Schmid
Introduction
Youth unemployment seems to be quite moderate in many Asian countries by
conventional statistics, particularly in South Korea, but also in India. Germany, with a
current youth unemployment rate of 7.7 percent, is one of the very few European countries
outperforming India. Certainly, these figures are hardly comparable, not least due to the
large informal sector in India, and agriculture plays only a minor role in most European
countries. Nevertheless, the Indian case is in at least three other respects different from
Europe, in particular from Germany. From the perspective of intergenerational risk
sharing, India’s youth unemployment rate is three to four times higher than the
unemployment rate of adults in their core age; in Germany, this figure is below two. In
addition, educated youth in India face a higher risk of unemployment than the low
educated, whereas in Europe it is the other way round. A further peculiarity can be seen
when unemployment is measured by the number of youth not in employment, education or
training (NEET) as a percent of the total youth population. India’s NEET rate,
approximately 28 percent, is at the top of the G20 countries, whereas the German NEET
rate corresponds to its unemployment rate.
This essay intends to shed some light on this conundrum: It first sketches some descriptive
material, setting the stage and demonstrating the highly differentiated statistical landscape
of various measures for youth unemployment in Europe compared to India and in
particular to Germany. Second, it provides a simple but powerful model for the main
causes of youth unemployment and for related general policy strategies illustrated by good
practice examples from Europe, in particular Germany. Third, because a large part of the
problem is structural, requiring long-term solutions, possible immediate measures to
mitigate the severe long-term scar effects for unemployed youth are also briefly reviewed.
3
Large differences of unemployment performance among European countries, for instance,
reveal the importance of automatic stabilisers like unemployment insurance in order to
counteract the tendency of market economies to put most of the burden of adjustment in
times of recession on youth.
The main part of this essay, however, is devoted to possible lessons for India from Europe,
in particular from countries with low youth unemployment like Austria, Denmark,
Germany and the Netherlands. The theoretical framework for these lessons is taken from
the concept of Transitional Labour Markets (TLM) which emphasises dual education and
vocational training systems as an institutional device both for fairer intergenerational risk
sharing as well as for a smoother transition from school to work.
1. Setting the stage: Youth unemployment in Europe, Germany and India
Youth unemployment seems to be quite moderate in India: Conventionally measured as a
percentage of the corresponding ‘active’ labour force, youth unemployment was only
about 11 percent in 2011/12 compared to about 23 percent on average in the European
Member States (EU-28) at the time of writing (October 2014). Germany, with a current
youth unemployment rate below 8 percent, is one of the very few European countries
outperforming India in this respect (Table 1, line 1).2
The Netherlands, Austria and Switzerland are the other European countries with moderate
youth unemployment rates. On the other hand, there are EU member states with incredibly
high levels of youth unemployment, lifting the overall average level in Europe: In
November 2013, the Mediterranean countries Greece and Spain had levels of around 55
percent, and Portugal, Italy and Croatia had levels between 35 and 50 percent. The
German case, however, has not always been so exceptional particularly if we look back
prior to the recession. Its current ‘comfortable’ level of youth unemployment reflects to
some extent the recent ‘German job miracle’ (Biavaschi et al. 2012, Eichhorst 2012, Rinne
and Zimmermann 2013), and to some extent various flexibility buffers that helped
2 For more detailed information see Table 1A and Figures 1A-6A in Appendix.
4
overcome the last recession with only a minor impact on overall unemployment and to
which we shall come back later in this paper. Nevertheless, compared to most other
European countries, Germany seems to have youth unemployment largely under control.
Table 1: Youth unemployment indicators: India compared to Europe (EU-27/28) and Germany, in percent
INDIA EUROPE GERMANY
Youth Unemployment Rate (Unemployed youth 15–24 as percent of active youth labour force) ≈ 11 23.2 7.7
Youth NEET Rate (Youth 15–24 not in employment, education or training as percent of youth population) ≈ 28 13.2 7.7
Youth U Rate Women/Men (for India: urban areas) ≈ 1.8 < 1.0 < 0.9
Youth U Rate/Adult U Rate (Youth U Rate 15–24 divided by Adult U Rate 25-74) ≈ 3.3 2.5 1.6
Youth U Rate High Educated (for India: Men Urban) (for India: Female Urban)
≈ 16 ≈ 23 18.8 3.9
Youth U Rate Low Educated (for India: Men Urban) (for India: Female Urban)
≈ 3 ≈ 2 31.0 11.4
Youth Unemployment Ratio (Unemployed Youth 15–24 as percent of youth population aged 15–24) n.a. 9.8 4.0
Source: NSSO (2014:192), OECD/ILO (2014:6), OECD (2014), own calculations. Data for India refer to the years 2011/12, except NEET (2009/10); data for Europe and Germany represent most recent available figures (2013/14) or 2012 (NEET).
However, the Indian case is in at least four respects different from Europe and Germany.
First, the conventional measure of youth unemployment has serious flaws which lead to a
lot of confusion. First of all, it does not consider that an increasing number of young
people enter and stay in education (secondary or full-time vocational schools or
universities); in other words, they are not available to the labour market and do not belong
to the “active labour force”. Moreover, the conventional measure of youth unemployment
does not consider that many young people become discouraged and withdraw from the
5
‘active’ labour force.3 Youth unemployment measured in NEET and related to the total
youth population takes a broader spectrum of jobless people into account, relating it to the
total youth population: Youth neither in employment nor in education or training as a
percentage of the total youth population is much higher in India by an approximate
measure delivered by OECD/ILO (2014); it is in the range of 28 percent compared to 13.2
percent in Europe and only 7.7 percent in Germany (Table 1, line 2).
Second, young women in India face a higher risk of unemployment than men, in particular
in urban areas, whereas in most European countries young women have – in contrast to
former times – lower unemployment rates than men, particularly in Germany (Table 1,
line 3).
Third, from the perspective of intergenerational risk sharing India’s youth unemployment
rate is about three to four times higher than the unemployment rate of adults; in Europe,
this figure is on average 2.5, and in Germany only 1.6 (Table 1, line 4).
The fourth spectacular difference is the fact that educated youth in India face a much
higher risk of unemployment than the low educated, whereas in Europe, and in particular
in Germany it is the other way round. The unemployment rate of high-educated
(“graduated & above”) young Indian women in urban areas is 23 percent in contrast to
only 2 percent of low-educated (“literate and up to primary level”) young women (Table
1, lines 5 and 6). In Europe, the unemployment risk of highly educated youth is on average
only about half of the unemployment risk of low-skilled, and in Germany it is even less
than a third (3.9 percent vs. 11.4 percent). This educational gap still holds true if we look
at the whole youth cohort aged 15 to 29 in terms of NEET rates in OECD countries: The
only countries where high-educated youth face a considerable higher NEET rate than low-
educated youth are Iceland, Japan, Korea and Greece (see Figure 3A, Appendix).
3 The European media, for instance, often mistakenly report that more than half of the Greek or Spanish youth (over 50% or one of two) are unemployed. This is correct related to the baseline of the “active youth labour force” (the employed and unemployed youth); but it is wrong measured in relation to the whole youth population. In 2013, the youth unemployment ratio (unemployed youth as a percentage of the population aged 15–24) was “only” 16.6% in Greece (i.e. one of six), and “only” 9.8% in EU-28 or 4% in Germany (Table 1, line 7).
6
To sum up: Despite a relatively moderate level of youth unemployment by conventional
measures, like most European countries, India has a serious youth unemployment problem
and this problem seems to be particularly related to those youth with an academic
education, whereas Germany, too, obviously has a youth unemployment problem which,
however, is mainly related to a low-educational status. Furthermore, like many other
European countries, India faces a paradoxical situation where, on the one hand, youth are
looking for jobs and on the other hand industry is suffering from the lack of skilled
workers, a skill mismatch that makes youth unemployable (Sanghi and Srija 2014).
In the following, I will shed some light on these questions: What are the main causes of
youth unemployment and which policy strategies in general could contribute to solving
this problem? What kind of policy measures could immediately be taken to avoid long-
term scar effects for unemployed youth? What lessons (and which not) might India learn
from Europe, in particular from Germany? In the outlook I come back to the puzzle of
highly and academically inflated youth unemployment which seems to be quite common
in Asia, in particular in South Korea, but also to some extent in India, by referring to a
possible hidden cause: A strong insurance motive might explain the low status of middle-
level vocational training and the overall striving for an academic degree.
2. Main causes of youth unemployment and possible policy strategies
The issue of youth unemployment is certainly complex, but – as Nobel Prize winner
Robert Solow once said – “fine distinctions make bad policy”. So, a simple but powerful
causal framework with corresponding policy strategies might look like the following
Figure (Figure 1).
7
Figure 1: Youth Unemployment: A Simple Causal Framework and Possible Policy Strategies
Youth needs more andbetter jobs
Youth needs the right skills
Youth needs good governance
support job creation, complemented by sensible
job maintenance, flexible jobs and work sharing
raise learning capacities, complemented by dual learning systems that
combine learning with working and earning
foster cooperative industrial relations, fair risk sharing, ensure quality standards,
fight against discrimination
Youth unemployment has three main causes, and all three may be interconnected:
● First, it is the lack of jobs due to economic slumps, low public or private investment or
low international competitiveness. So, first of all, youth needs more and better jobs.
The main strategies related to this challenge are the public support of job creation at
various levels, of sensible job maintenance, flexible jobs and work sharing.
● The second cause might be the mismatch between skills demanded by existing jobs
and skills provided by the educational system. So, youth need better skills. The main
strategies related to this challenge are two: Because one never knows exactly what
specific skills are needed in the future, the first strategy is to raise learning capacities,
in particular through general and higher education. But (young) people also have to
earn a living; so to some extent these skills have to be related to the labour market, for
instance, through dual education systems that combine learning with working and
earning.
8
● The third cause might be labour market rigidities that prevent or slow down the
necessary adjustment to changing technologies, to changing needs or preferences
related to goods and services, or to changing terms of trade due to internationalisation
or globalisation. So, youth need good governance. The main strategies related to this
challenge are cooperative industrial relations that allow flexible wages and moderate
employment protection, fair risk sharing through reasonable social protection, and
non-discriminated access to all jobs, and the assurance of high-quality standards of
working conditions.
In the following I can only briefly sketch the main points related to these strategies based
on a quite selective review of the literature; the discussion of corresponding policy
interventions also touches only superficially on the main strategic lines without going into
a deeper debate.
2.1 Youth need more and better jobs
What are the reasons for the lack of jobs for young people? These reasons may be cyclical
or structural. First, markets are strong in innovation and competitiveness, but they also
tend to speculative investment instead of real investments. The last recession in Europe
provides a good example: Those countries that experienced the largest increase in youth
unemployment4 had sharp declines in house prices during the Great Recession, suggesting
a direct link to the youth labour market because a disproportionate number of the young
men working in construction who particularly suffered from the effects of property price
bubbles (Bell and Blanchflower 2011). Second, recessions clearly disadvantage youth
through the “last in first out” rule; youth are therefore the most vulnerable group in
economic slumps when demand collapses: They are the first to be dismissed and
companies close their doors to recruitments first for the young without work experience
(e.g. Kawaguchi and Murao 2012). Third, markets tend towards excessive wage
volatilities and inequalities leading to in-work poverty; fourth, they also tend towards
investments in the most profitable sectors neglecting public goods and infrastructure.
4 For example: Estonia (+20.7 percentage points), Ireland (+18.4), Latvia (+23.2), Lithuania (+26.1) and Spain (+21.6) from the beginning of 2008 to the third quarter of 2010.
9
These four main reasons for the lack of jobs may also be taken to structure the following
brief sketch of promising policy strategies.
(1) The first strategy relates to the cyclical lack of jobs, which was aggravated during the
last recession through the fiscal and financial crisis. A recent study by the IMF (2014)
found that cyclical factors explain around 50 percent of the changes in European youth
unemployment rates and even 70 percent of the increase in unemployment rates in stressed
Euro area countries. The sensitivity of unemployment rates to the business cycle (Okun’s
coefficient), however, varies across countries. Estimates range from not significantly
different to zero (e.g. Austria) to -1.9 in Spain, i.e. a 1 percent decline in growth increases
youth unemployment rates by almost 2 percentage points. Countries with the biggest
increases in youth unemployment rates since the crisis tend to be those that are most
affected by the business cycle (i.e., they have the highest Okun’s coefficients); and in
every country the estimated Okun’s coefficient is higher for youth than for adults, on
average almost three times as large.
What follows from this observation should be quite clear: Governments can help mitigate
the detrimental impact of recessions on youth (Okun’s coefficient) through deficit
spending in the slump and savings in the boom. However, although such Keynesian
instruments certainly have some value, they are limited due to well-known state failure:
Politicians like to spend but not to save; short-term investments are often misplaced
(recall, e.g., some spectacular building of bridges without connections in Japan), and good
investments take time to develop their bite on unemployment.
A more sustainable policy strategy for governments is to bind themselves to the mast of
the ship like Ulysses against the Sirens in Greek mythology, which means to resist
tempting but dangerous policies and to build instead automatic stabilisers into the system:
For instance, unemployment insurance which maintains effective demand during the
crisis; short-time work allowance which prevents unemployment through risk sharing
among workers, employers and the state during a crisis; health insurance for all
independent of having or not having a job; reliable basic pensions independent from the
individual work-life career which is often determined by pure luck. All these automatic
10
stabilisers maintain not only consumer demand in times of crisis but also their trust in the
economic recovery. European research shows that countries with such automatic
stabilisers perform best and have kept youth unemployment within reasonable limits
(Dolls et al. 2011).
However, such automatic stabilisers cannot be established overnight; they need long-term
investments. A more short-term possibility is to allocate resources for special youth
measures in the framework of active labour market policy (ALMP) in an anticyclical way.
The essential instruments of ALMP are matching services, training and (carefully
targeted) subsidised employment. European research shows that – on average – increasing
ALMP expenditure per unemployed worker by 1 percentage point of GDP per member of
the labour force lowers the overall youth NEET risk by 0.15 percentage points (European
Foundation 2012). Switzerland (with relatively low youth unemployment) is one of the
few countries to have established an anticyclical expenditure rule for active labour market
policy (Duell et al. 2010).
(2) Second, regarding structural reasons for the lack of jobs, the first thing governments
should do is get the financial market under control. Sustainable growth is only possible if
productivity gains are continuously channelled into innovation and investments instead of
risky speculation.5 The respective proper policy strategy is to support sustainable
competitiveness by setting the right institutional framework conditions for innovative
private investment, e.g. through regulating the banking sector and through the
deregulation of product market monopolies. Furthermore, targeted industrial policy helps
to create new jobs, e.g. by fostering green technologies or information and communication
technologies. If unemployment is regionally quite different – as is the case both in Europe
and India – such incentives might be combined with a regional component. Since
industrial investments are globally interdependent, some regional and international
coordination of growth strategies is necessary.6
5 This complex issue would require more attention but goes beyond my expertise and the range of this paper; see among many others Hellwig and Admati (2013). 6 This holds especially true for the still nationally fragmented Eurozone; see for the need of creating an “adequate fiscal capacity” in the Eurozone, e.g. Alberto Majocchi (2013).
11
Examples of what happens if governments are not investing enough in competitive
technologies can be observed in some European countries like Spain and Greece, where
youth unemployment now exceeds (conventionally measured) 50 percent. France with a
youth unemployment rate of 25 percent is another illustrative case. Its lack of
competitiveness is, for instance, reflected in the drastic decline of jobs in industrial
manufacturing. In 2000 France still had 20 percent of jobs in manufacturing which fell to
only 12.5 percent in 2011; in Germany, the share of manufacturing jobs even increased to
26.2 percent during this time.
Other framework conditions are a broadly skilled, middle-level workforce of craftsmen
and engineers maintained through an extensive apprenticeship system (see 2.2 below). The
European case may also suggest that the focus of industrial policy should be directed
towards small- and medium-sized companies, in Germany called the “Mittelstand”. This
device already seems to have been acknowledged in India. In its annual budget report, the
Indian Finance Ministry says that “too many small firms stay small and unproductive and
are not allowed to die gracefully”. According to the World Bank, insolvency processes
take on average 7.9 years and cost 8.6 percent of the estate value. The real challenge,
however, is to be able to not just start up, but to continue to grow, thereby becoming a
source of sustainable jobs and value creation. Moreover, too many large profitable firms
prefer to rely on temporary contract labour than on training workers for longer-term jobs
(Ministry of Finance 2013: 36–8).
Certainly, the German model cannot be copied by India, and it should not be copied, not
least due to its own flaws (see below). It is therefore hard for a European outsider to give
specific advice in this respect. Only an emphasis on general principles might make sense.
One of these principles, the European case seems to teach, is that a healthy economy needs
a hard core of competitive industrial manufacturing.7 Of course, the decline of
employment in industrial manufacturing due to its productivity dynamics can be
compensated to some extent by intelligent services. But these service jobs should not be
restricted to luxury articles like the French brand names Louis Vuitton, Hermès and Yves 7 In sharp contrast to China in the last 20 years, growth in India was not driven by manufacturing but by services, however mainly by services with low job intensity (Drèze and Sen 2013: 31).
12
Saint-Laurent. A competitive service industry must be related to mass markets like
financial or insurance services, information and communication technologies, and
education or health services. An increasing part of those services provide essential inputs
for a modern industrial manufacturing. Another general principle is the slow
transformation of the (huge) Indian informal sector into a formal sector through intelligent
institutional devices.8 One step in this direction would be to establish basic income
guarantees for workers hit by insolvencies, a device that would allow unproductive firms
to die ‘gracefully’ without causing high social costs.
(3) A third important framework condition for job creation is wage moderation. Some
European countries with high and rising youth unemployment (in particular France, Italy,
Greece and Ireland) had previously endured unit wage costs exceeding productivity
growth or high minimum wages that made employers reluctant to hire youth. Of course,
wages should not fall below a decent minimum standard, which might be a reason for
policy intervention in favour of a minimum income guarantee. And despite moderate
wages it might still be difficult for some SME to shoulder the wage costs so that carefully
targeted wage subsidies, in particular for young people, might make sense (see 3.5 below).
Germany can only partly serve as a model here: First, related to young people the German
case is particular due to its apprenticeship system which ensures low-entry wages; second,
Germany’s moderate wage policy goes back to its tried and tested cooperative relationship
between trade unions and employers’ associations, a social partnership protected and
supported by the government; both structural features cannot easily be copied (see 2.3
below).
(4) The fourth policy strategy is public job creation particularly in areas where the market
usually does not invest due to lack of profitability which goes back to the non-rival or
non-exclusive character of some goods and services.9 Although a clear-cut distinction
8 The budget report of the Ministry of Finance (2013: 47) acknowledges this principle: “India’s high rate of informality is a drag on its economic development and a source of considerable inequity. Productivity differences between workers in the formal and informal sectors are large [...], suggesting that moving a worker from an informal to a formal firm would bring about sizeable gains from improved allocation of resources.” 9 For a good theoretical discussion of public vs. private goods see Adams and McCormick (1993).
13
between public and private goods or services is not possible, chronic underinvestment in
public goods like traffic infrastructure, education, health and care services has been proven
by many studies to be chronic. Furthermore, as jobs in agriculture and industrial
manufacturing are in secular decline, service jobs are the most likely future entry into the
life or work for young people, independent of whether they are created by the market or
the state. For India, Drèze and Sen (2013: 33) deplore in particular the lack of progress in
public services as a huge barrier to improving the quality of life.
So, there is a wide range of possible productive policy interventions, not least – and that
sounds like a paradox – by strengthening market principles, for instance, opening access to
markets for small- and medium-sized enterprises by fighting all kinds of monopolies or by
ensuring that young people are allocated to jobs by their competence and not by their
formal educational status (credentialism). This leads to the next policy strategy against
youth unemployment.
2.2 Youth need the right skills
The main reasons for the lack of skill or for misguided skills are simple: Too low
investment in ‘human capital’; asymmetric investment leading, for example, to ‘academic
inflation’ and credentialism; job-specific investments in human capital that might be
optimal in the short term but sub-optimal in the long term because they involve a high risk
of unemployment due to the low transferability of skills; last but not least, even if
investments in ‘human capital’ are sufficient, there might still be skill mismatch due to
information asymmetries and lack of trust. The basic policy strategies are evident and are
briefly recapitulated in the following.
(1) First, investments into ‘human and social capital’, especially into general skills, must
be sufficient and inclusive, which means all young people, independent of social and
economic background, must have access to schools that ensure a decent level of general
education corresponding to the level of overall prosperity. In this respect, many countries
even in Europe have deficits in human capital investment, in particular related to the
inclusive aspect. Germany, for instance, is still a country in which the level of skills and
14
competencies depends much on the social and economic background (see PISA results). In
other words, ‘inherited educational poverty’ with a corresponding higher risk of youth
unemployment is still widespread, but it seems to be even more common in India than in
Europe: Drèze and Sen (2013: 107–142) basically attribute India’s gap in social
development to huge deficits in its education system.10
(2) The other three enumerated reasons for skill deficits are very much interrelated so that
policy strategies have to deal with them correspondingly. My proposition is to enhance
dual education systems according to the theory of transitional labour markets (TLM). The
main gist of the TLM concept – Figure 2 – is to manage social risks over the life course
through a system of employment insurance (Schmid 2013a).
Figure 2: The Concept of Transitional Labour Markets (TLM): Managing Social Risks over the Life Course through a System of Employment Insurance
Private Households
Disability,
Pension
Employment
Educ
atio
n
Unemployment
Restricted Earnings Capacity
Loss of Earnings
Volatile or tooLow Earnings
ReducedEarnings Capacity
Lack ofEarnings Capacity
10 India’s literacy rate for female youth in the age group of 15–24 years in 2010, for instance, was 74 percent compared to 99 percent in China (Drèze and Sen 2013: 113).
15
Managing the basic risk in the transition phase from school to work, i.e. the lack of
earnings capacities or the risk of un-employability, means – first of all and as already
mentioned – sufficient inclusive investments into general ‘human and social capital’,
especially in general competences like reading and mathematical skills, communication
skills, learning abilities and secondary virtues like endurance and ambiguity tolerance. The
emphasis on human and social capital means to develop learning capacities not only to
make young people fit for the market but also to enable young people to raise their voice
and to shape the market. A high level of learning capacities is the best insurance against
all other social risks that occur during the life course.
Second, managing the risk of un-employability over the life course cannot only consist of
providing high levels of formal education. Education has to be related to market needs, i.e.
to the skills required to produce the goods or to deliver the services consumers demand.
The TLM concept suggests the following four elements to ensure employability: (1) the
combination of learning, working, earning and identity building; (2) the combination of
job-specific and general skills; (3) the reduction of information asymmetries by voice and
trust, and (4) finally a fair risk sharing of costs and benefits related to the investment. This
argument shall now be explained in more detail.
New jobs often require new skills.11 But it would be a mistake to think that all these new
skills require high tertiary education at universities: Time served in formal education is not
enough; what counts, at the end of the day, is what you can do with what you know
(Wagner 2012). This becomes all the more true with the internet revolution which within
seconds allows everybody full access to all the passive knowledge that one may need
through intelligent search machines like Google or Yahoo. Furthermore, it is a mistake
that skills required in the formal education system are sufficient over the whole life
course. With lifelong learning there is more at stake than a further extension of formal
schooling, in particularly in view of the complementarities of the learning processes
(Heckman 2008). And, finally, it is a mistake to believe that all young people enjoy
working with abstract symbols possibly combined with a lot of red tape and endless
11 For an overview regarding the European research landscape see Schmid (2012).
16
meetings. Many prefer practical work and work with which they can connect some
meaning and which gives them a personal identity.
These are the main reasons why it makes sense to establish dual learning systems in
particular – but not necessarily only – in the transition phase from school to work. Dual
learning systems are the paradigm for the ideas of TLM,12 which generally intend to build
institutional bridges between labour market work and work or life outside the labour
market to ensure a ‘work-life balance’. Part of the underlying theory is the insight that
human and social capital are not only built in schools but also on the job. The flipside of
this insight is that the longer people remain jobless the more their acquired human and
social capital deteriorates. So, everything has to be done to avoid or to reduce
unemployment not only for youth but also for adults, including mature-aged workers.
Another essential element of this theory is fair risk sharing of the costs and benefits of
investing in human capital. Employers will be reluctant to invest in training or education if
people run away after the costly investment, or if these skilled people are then poached by
employers that have not contributed to the investment. Employees will not invest in firm-
specific skills if their investment is not acknowledged by fair wages, good working
conditions and some job security. The state or the social partners (trade unions and
employer associations) can play a crucial role in solving these conflicts that are typical for
the production of public goods, for instance, by co-financing (in particular education
infrastructure), by defining and controlling marketable quality standards, by wage
coordination, and by reasonable employment protection. Through the standardisation of
training contents, social partners and governments can ensure high-quality standards
through control and certification. Participation in the definition of quality standards by
employers and employees (usually via their sectoral or occupational interest
representations) and their effective control guarantee, on the one hand, that workers can
trust that their skills are valued on the market, and on the other hand, that employers can
rely on the competences of graduates entering the labour market. Certificated (i.e. legally
acknowledged) skills are also ‘marketable’ and thereby enhance the mobility of workers. 12 To the concept of TLM see – among others – Schmid and Gazier (2002), Schmid (2008), Schmid (2011), Muffels (2008), Rogowski (2008), and Brzinsky-Fay (2011).
17
European economies confirm the value of such dual learning systems. Youth
unemployment is lowest in European countries with dual learning systems that connect
their education system closer to the labour market. These countries are Austria, Denmark,
Germany, Netherlands and Switzerland (Ebner 2012; Figure 1A, Appendix); these
countries also score at the top regarding low NEET rates (Figure 2A, Appendix). On
average, increasing the share of upper secondary students that attend dual learning systems
by one percentage point decreases NEET rates by about 0.04–0.09 percentage points
(Eurofound 2012).
The labour market as such will not establish the respective institutions that ensure not only
good transitions from school to work but also good transitions between work, education
and family over the lifecourse. This leads to the next policy strategy to fight youth
unemployment.
2.3 Youth need the right governance
The main reasons for bad governance are again quite clear: Markets are strong in
competitive governance but they also tend to monopolies, for instance, in the form of
excessive employment protection of ‘insiders’ (people who have a job). Hostile industrial
relations that neglect the advantages of cooperation (and eventually of compromises), and
no or unfair risk sharing of investments (here in particular in ‘human capital’) are other
forms of bad governance. The corresponding promising policy strategies are quite evident
and shall briefly be enumerated and illustrated by some examples.
(1) Good governance, first of all, means to fight against all kinds of monopolies, for
instance, against unconditional employment protection for labour market insiders. But one
has to be careful because not all employment protection reflects ‘bad governance’; there
are good reasons for providing some protection to workers, in particular with regard to the
mutual investments of employers and employees in ‘human capital’. If there is no
protection at all, as already mentioned, both parties will not invest in vocational education
and training because they are not assured of the returns of investment. The TLM principle
of fair risk sharing requires some security in this respect, which prudent employment
18
protection conditional on internal flexibility tends to provide. Meanwhile, differentiated
empirical studies provide persuasive evidence of this proposition: Employment protection
is not detrimental in terms of youth unemployment if it is connected with mutual human
capital investments of employers and employees in form of dual learning systems.
Brzinsky-Fay and Ebner (2013) studied the relationship of employment protection and
youth unemployment in OECD countries over a longer period of time (1990–2012). By
grouping the OECD countries into three categories—first, countries with no dual systems
at all, second, countries with partly dual systems, and third, countries with dual learning
systems—they show clear evidence that countries with dual systems do better in terms of
various indicators of youth unemployment (Figure 4A, Appendix). A simple correlation
between employment protection and youth unemployment for all OECD countries seems
to confirm the mainstream economists’ expectation that countries ranking high according
to the OECD employment protection index have higher youth unemployment rates (Figure
5A, Appendix). However, at a second glance, using the grouping of OECD countries by
the degree of dual systems, this positive correlation holds only for OECD countries with
no dual systems at all. OECD countries with partly, and in particular OECD countries with
fully-developed dual systems have lower relative youth unemployment rates (Figure 6A,
Appendix).
(2) A second promising policy strategy is to support cooperative industrial relations. Well-
functioning corporate systems intermediate between the free market and central state.
Market means the autonomous determination of wages or working conditions by
individual employers and individual workers. Collective organisations of both parties give
the respective individuals a stronger voice, workers in particular. However, the state
thereby plays a strong role, too, for instance, by acknowledging and protecting the
resulting collective agreements or by setting minimum standards below which the market
is not allowed to work – for instance, minimum wages. Corporate governance plays an
important role in taming youth unemployment. European research shows that employment
systems with cooperative industrial relations systems have lower unemployment and in
particular lower youth unemployment. Austria, Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands
19
(all with low or moderate youth unemployment) are examples of cooperative industrial
relations; whereas France, Greece, Italy and Spain (all with high youth unemployment)
have hostile industrial relations. Good cooperation between unions, employers and the
state also reduces NEET rates. Specifically, increasing the level of wage coordination by 1
point on the scale reduces NEET rates by about 0.75–0.96 percentage points (Eurofound
2012). Apart from wages and working conditions, collective agreements can also deal
with education and training and can thereby directly contribute to fighting youth
unemployment. In Germany, for instance, training pact agreements between employers’
and workers’ organisations (the ‘social partners’) at regional or sectoral levels are quite
effective in providing more apprenticeship places.
(3) Encouraging cooperation between firms and schools, colleges or universities can also
improve the link between the labour market and the education system, for example,
through establishing cooperative universities. Of crucial importance is the coordination of
educational measures, labour market and social policies. For example, even in Sweden,
which is in many respects a model country for employment and social policy (high
welfare and high productivity), youth unemployment is high (24 percent in 2013!).
Swedish experts explain this conundrum mainly by the divided responsibilities between
school, labour exchange and social services. In Sweden there are strict demarcations
between standard education and youth measures, and there is an overdue emphasis on
academically oriented upper secondary school education (Olofsson and Wadensjö 2012).
In Austria, Denmark, Switzerland and (partly) in Germany or the Netherlands (with low
youth unemployment) schools and firms cooperate more closely.
(4) Finally, dual education systems are also effective devices for a fair divide of the
investment risks between employers, workers and the state, as has already been
demonstrated related to the issue of employment protection. We shall return to this issue
in more detail, in particular related to financing, when we come to drawing lessons from
Europe for India.
20
3. Immediate Measures against Youth Unemployment
Most of the suggestions developed above need time for implementation because they refer
to structural reforms. They do not provide immediate solutions for many youth currently
without a decent job or in further education. But something must be done quickly and with
an immediate impact. Research on youth unemployment for both Europe and the United
States consistently show significant scarring effects of early unemployment in later life:
Even after 30 years wages and happiness are lower for formerly unemployed youth than
for young people who had a smooth transition from school to work (Bell and
Blanchflower 2011). For Germany, Schmillen and Umkehrer (2014) found that the
accumulated unemployment risk for youth with long spells of unemployment later during
their life course is on average 32 months compared to only four months for youth without
unemployment; interestingly, the scarring impact on the frequency of unemployment is
more pronounced than the scarring effect on duration.
The Council of the European Union adopted in April 2013 a Youth Guarantee as a
‘Recommendation’ to its member states (Council 2013). Member States should ensure
that, within four months of leaving school or losing a job, young people under 25 can
either find a good-quality job suited to their education, skills and experience or acquire the
education, skills and experience required to find a job in the future through an
apprenticeship, a traineeship or further education. Under the Youth Employment Initiative
(YEI), €6 billion was allocated and frontloaded so that all this money is committed in
2014 and 2015 for respective investments of Member States rather than over the seven-
year period of the EU-Multiannual Financial Framework. 20 Member States are eligible
for funding, as they have regions where youth unemployment is over 25 percent.13
Of course, such a guarantee is more easily suggested than implemented; in October 2014
only a small part of the fund had been used.14 There is also no one-size-fits-all concept.
13 Spain can count on the highest amount with 29% of the total budget, followed by Italy 18% and France 10%. The UK will receive 6% of the funding, Greece and Portugal about 5% each, whilst Germany does not qualify for receiving funding from the programme (Berlingieri et al. 2014: 48). 14 The European Commission (2014) acknowledges Austria and Finland as model countries for its Youth Guarantee programme.
21
However, from previous European experiences, five promising strategies can be
suggested: (1) ensure school attendance of all children and prevent early school leaving;
(2) reintegrate early school leavers; (3) facilitate the transition from school to work; (4)
foster employability; (5) remove barriers and provide incentives to employers. For each
strategy, I proffer one European example to provide a gist of what can be done and I also
reflect the relevance for India as far as possible.15
(1) Dropping out early from school is the most dangerous pathway for the young and one
of the most important drivers for poverty, ‘inactivity’ (out of the labour market), repeated
unemployment or long-term unemployment. Therefore, the EU2020-Strategy set a goal to
reduce school-dropout rates to 10 percent in 2020 from 14.1 (2010).16
The reasons for leaving school early are manifold. Important causes in Europe are lack of
motivation, cognitive troubles, and language difficulties especially for migrants. Inclusion
as a principle of non-selective education in general, and as a method to prevent early
school leaving in particular, however, is still hotly debated all over Europe. The United
Nations convention on the rights of persons with disabilities adopted in 2008
(www.un.org/disabilities/) has given this debate an additional drive. Some countries in
Europe (e.g. Luxembourg, Germany) experiment with alternative learning environments
for six to 12 weeks, called “mosaic classes” in which young scholars at risk of dropping
out are given various personalised help to return successfully to their class.17
In India, the main problem is obviously quite different: Poor families often rely on a
financial contribution from their children’s work, so that a minimum income guarantee
might be the first step to ensure that young people get at least a basic decent education at
primary and secondary schools. As already mentioned, compared to China, Japan or South
Korea, the reading skills of 15-year-old students in India seem to be quite weak (see also
15 For an extensive review of measures taken up and recommended see Eurofound (2012, 2014); and for the most recent overview of the Commission see European Commission (2014). 16 Share of the population aged 18–24 not in education or training with only lower-secondary education (ISCED 0, 1, 2 or 3c). 17 Related in particular to non-cognitive skills (like motivation, endurance, self-control, curiosity), even earlier interventions directed at disadvantaged children are required (Heckman 2008).
22
OECD/ILO 2014: Figure 4, page 8). The National Rural Employment Guarantee
Programme (NREGP) certainly goes in the right direction to ensure school attendance.18
(2) For young people who have already dropped out early, second-chance opportunities
may help, for instance, special preparatory schools (e.g. Belgium, Germany) that provide
skills outside the conventional schedule yet validate these skills so that they are recognised
by potential employers.
Again, for the Indian case, first a minimum income guarantee might be the most
promising solution to bring young people back to school. Second, targeted educational
assistance especially for children in the early phases of education have proven to be quite
efficient and might serve both aims: preventing dropping out and bringing children back to
school. The recent Indian budget report has already taken up this lesson: “Evidence that
‘business-as-usual’ pedagogy can be improved is found in several randomised evaluations
finding large positive impacts of supplemental remedial instruction in early grades that are
targeted to the child’s current level of learning (as opposed to simply following the
textbook)” (Ministry of Finance (2013: 52).
(3) One quick way to facilitate school-to-work-transitions is to identify already existing
skill deficits on the market and to subsidise youth jobs in these areas. For example, in the
Netherlands, the XXL Jobs Initiative offers young people dual training jobs in sectors
where the retirement of older workers will lead to a shortage of skills and knowledge. It is
intended that the older employees will transfer their skills to the young people and that the
young people will receive strong guidance in their transition to the labour market
(Eurofound 2012: 124).
Some subsidised dual training can be arranged relatively quickly even when a substantive
infrastructure for apprenticeship-systems is not available. Maitra and Mani (2014) report
on a subsidised vocational training program in stitching and tailoring, targeted at women
18 In the year of announcement (2006), 150 billion rupees ($3.4 billion) were allocated, guaranteeing 100 days per year employment to one member of every rural household if they were prepared to do unskilled manual labour at a minimum wage of about 60 rupees.
23
aged between 18 and 39, with at least five or more grades of schooling residing in low
socio-economic areas or slums of New Delhi. Applicants to this training programme were
randomly assigned to one of the following two groups: treatment group (received access to
a six-month-training) and the control group (did not receive access to training). The six-
month effects of the programme indicate that women who were offered the training
programme are 6 percentage points more likely to be employed, 4 percentage points more
likely to be self-employed, work 2.5 additional hours per week, and earn 150 percent more
per month than women in the control group. A second round of follow-up data collected
18 months after the intervention found that the six-month treatment effects were all
sustained over this period.
The authors conclude that even in India investing in vocational training programmes can
result in substantial economic gains for women in low-income households. However,
overcoming constraints related to accessibility (for instance, spatial distance of the
training sites), credit resources (in this case, e.g. for buying sewing machines), and
availability of child care support in the household is crucial to ensure that young women
can participate and complete training programmes of any kind, not just vocational training
in stitching and tailoring. An additional advantage of such programmes is that it results in
‘human capital’ accumulation that is specific to the person undertaking the training and
cannot be confiscated by their spouse as often happens in pure micro-credit programmes.
(4) Often, formal and sufficient skills are available but work experience is missing. One
way to fill this gap is to establish accredited training companies that provide such
experiences. In Austria, young people who cannot find suitable apprenticeship places in a
company after leaving compulsory school can get a ‘supra-company apprenticeship
training’, which offers practical training in apprenticeship workshops in specialised
facilities – for example, in hotels, restaurants, and private or public canteens (Eurofound
2012: 129).19
19 I can report here from an own experience in Vienna (Austria), where I was invited to a hotel and restaurant that provided traineeships exclusively for youth with disabilities. It was touching to see how these young people proudly serve the meals and explain their own cooking.
24
Related to India, I see no principle objection against or barrier not to establish such
accredited training companies, which seem to be promising in particular in poor
conglomerated areas (e.g. slums).
(5) One of the most important barriers for employers when hiring young people is the lack
of work experience which leaves a gap between wages and expected productivity. Apart
from apprenticeships that already reduce youth entry wages, one way to remove this
barrier is to bridge this gap through temporary wage-cost subsidies or temporary
exemption from social contributions for employers recruiting additional (young) jobless
workers. In addition, many young jobless people could become entrepreneurs if business
start-ups were made easier by reducing red-tape, offering counselling and capitalising
unemployment benefits or providing temporary tax credits. Both, recruitment subsidies as
well as start-up subsidies have proven quite successful in German evaluation studies.20
However, if a lack of jobs (especially – as in India – in rural areas) is the predominant
problem, the impact of wage subsidies is limited, albeit not to be neglected. A recent study
on wage subsidies in developing countries found that if the main goal of government is to
create short-term jobs, wage subsidies might not be the most effective instrument. In
general the effects of wage subsidies on employment rates are modest and there can be
important substitution and windfall effects. If, however, the goal is to create jobs rapidly,
public works and services where subsidised jobs are created directly by the government
are probably a more effective alternative (Almeida et al. 2014).
Nevertheless, a more promising function of wage subsidies in developing countries or
threshold countries like India would be to allow workers to acquire skills that improve
their employability and labour market opportunities through work experience and on-the-
job-training. Some of the available empirical evidence suggests that, at least in the case of
certain groups such as youth, these effects of wage subsidies persist after they expire. In
this case, wage subsidies would need to be targeted to first-time job seekers or to workers
20 For an overview of German evaluation studies see Heyer et al. (2012); specifically for start-up subsidies see Caliendo and Künn (2010).
25
who have experienced long periods of unemployment or inactivity (Card et al. 2010;
Kluve et al. 2006).
4. Lessons to be learned from Europe
It is always hard to draw lessons, in particular from societies with quite different
historical, cultural and economic background like Europe and India. So, the following
concluding “lessons” can only be tentative and restricted to general principles. This
chapter therefore tries to summarise the European experiences in five slogans not meant as
“teaching” but as “reminders” for further reflections and discussion.
4.1 Mind the high economic and social costs of youth unemployment: Invest More!
Generally, in current times policy learning might be out of sight due to the difficulties of
mobilising sufficient resources. However, the current global fiscal and economic crisis is
not a crisis of resources but a crisis of inequality (Piketty 2013; Wilkinson and Pickett
2009) and the result of the speculative use of (our always) scarce resources through some
irresponsible banks plus the lack of efficient political control of global financial markets
(Hellwig and Admati 2013). The real problem is that too few of these resources are
channelled into real investments. We have an investment crisis, including a lack of
expenditure in the education of our young generation, and an underdeveloped (or even
non-existent) system of unemployment insurance or active labour market policies which –
if properly implemented – are investments and not costly consumption expenditure.
One also has to be aware of the tremendous costs of youth unemployment. In Europe,
these costs of Youth NEET were estimated to be €162 billion in 2012, corresponding to
about 1.3 percent of GDP.21 Of course, these costs vary a great deal between Member
States (from less than 0.6 percent in Denmark, Germany and Sweden to 4.3 percent in
21 These costs include ‘public finance costs’ that arise from the extra welfare payments (unemployment benefits, sickness benefits, disability benefits, and education-related allowances) and ‘total resource costs’ that include the loss to the economy and welfare measured as lost earnings (such as employee and self-employment income, non-cash employee benefits, goods produced for own consumption, and pensions from private plans (Eurofound 2014: 6); for comparative figures in 2011 see Figure 7A, Appendix.
26
Greece), and Europe will not be able to save the entire cost of €162 billion. However,
using the unit total cost of each person in NEET (€10,937), the analysis shows that if
enough vacancies were created in Europe to reintegrate 10 percent of NEETs into the
labour market, this would provide a saving of more than €15 billion per year. If 20 percent
of NEETs could be reintegrated, the saving would rise to €30 billion (Eurofound 2012,
2014).
What is needed, therefore, is first of all political leadership that tells people this truth and
acts accordingly. And it is not only the economic costs of youth unemployment that
belongs to this truth. The social costs, both for individuals and the society, are also
tremendous: long-term scarring effects in terms of wages and employment status, higher
criminal records, deterioration of health, lower political engagement, decreasing social
participation and – last but not least, as the American sociologist Robert Putnam expressed
it – an erosion of ‘thick trust’ (friendships and neighbourhoods) and above all an erosion
of ‘thin trust’, which means generalised social trust emphasising empathy, shared
interests, a sense of the common good, mutual respect and obligation among people
(Putnam 2000: 142).
So, the slogan “invest more” should be evident enough in face of the high costs of youth
unemployment, which certainly also applies in principle to the Indian economy. The
future will look bleak if governments fail in not inducing higher investments in more and
better jobs. Youth is the future of every society. But to invest more is not enough; it is – as
the following paragraph will show – also a matter of investing right.
4.2 Mind over-education as a waste of investment and source of injustice: Invest
right!
The correlation of higher education and higher risk of unemployment indicates that India’s
education system is not well adapted to the labour market.22 India even seems to have a
problem of ‘academic inflation’ or partial over-education. As we have already seen (Table
22 See above and in particular the extensive discussion of the Indian education system by Drèze and Sen (2013: 107–142).
27
1), the unemployment rates of all youth aged 15 to 29 for all male and female youth in
urban areas was 8.1 and 13.1 percent in 2011/12; the respective unemployment rates for
‘graduates & above youth’ were 16.3 and 23.4 percent. However, there are indications that
the real problem is less over-education in general but partly misguided higher education.
According to the ILO Global Employment Report, the occupational choices of many
youth seem to be problematic: “Indians with a diploma suffer particularly, with
unemployment rates reaching 34.5 per cent for women and 18.9 per cent for men during
2009–10. However, occupational choices bear a strong impact on the risk of joblessness as
workers with technical education face lower unemployment rates than other graduates
(only for men). At the same time, Indian employers have trouble hiring staff: according to
the 2011 Manpower Talent Shortage Survey, 67 per cent of employers stated that they had
difficulties filling positions” (ILO 2013: 81).
Some part of this unemployment gap between high- and low-educated youth might be
explained by the fact that educated young adults are more eager to search for jobs and are
thus more likely to count as unemployed than low-skilled youth who have less to win with
a regular job or might get more quickly discouraged. Moreover, as we know from
European countries like Greece, Italy and Spain with high youth unemployment among
the high-skilled, formally high-educated youth tends to displace low-educated youth in the
competition for jobs.23 Academic inflation is particularly pronounced in Korea (OECD
2012: 73–4, Schmid 2013b). Such a system creates a lot of waste not only in terms of
sunk-investment costs but also in terms of inequality and injustice. Getting a good job
mainly by formal credentials and not by competences creates wrong economic incentives
and discriminates against young people from low-income households.
But how can we ensure that investments in education get it “right”? The previous sections
hinted already to a solution: The establishment of dual learning systems through
transitional labour markets (TLM) which will be explained in more detail in the following
section.
23 A deeper analysis goes beyond the range of this paper. For the topic of over-education, in particular its impact on displacing low-educated on the labour market, see the illuminating studies by Quintini (2011) and Salverda (2014).
28
4.3 Mind the potential of dual learning systems (TLM): Combine education with work
and earning
As already suggested above (see 2.2 (2)), the concept of transitional labour market (TLM)
might ‘teach’ something here. It builds, among other things, on the concept of learning by
monitoring and on the theory of fair risk sharing.24 Related to youth unemployment, the
TLM concept focusses on the idea of building institutional bridges between the formal
education system and the labour market. The German vocational training system is a
paradigmatic example of this approach (Figure 3).
Vocational Track:
> 50% Apprentices> 20% Full-time
Vocational Schools> 30% Transitional System
(various tracks,3/4th with low or noformal education)
1/3 2/3
Upper SecondaryTrack:
> ca. 20% followinglater vocational track
> ca. 80% enteringuniversity studies
Figure 3: The German Vocational Training System
At about age 16, young people enter:
At roughly age 16, about one-third of young Germans enter the upper secondary track.
Later on (after graduation), about 20 percent of them enter a vocational track; about 80
percent enter university studies. About two-thirds of young Germans at about age 16 enter
the vocational track. Roughly 50 percent of them conclude a two- to three-and-a-half-year
24 See in particular Schmid and Gazier (2002: 1–22), Schmid (2008: 213–241); Schmid (2013a).
29
contract with an employer, learning one of about 350 licensed occupations on the job. At
the same time, they attend a vocational school where they acquire general knowledge. So,
in the ideal case, this system provides both: market-oriented skills with a realistic job
perspective and general skills needed to adapt to structural changes in the economy or to
unexpected changes during one’s personal life course. Another 20 percent in the
vocational track, in particular women, enter a full-time vocational school in Germany.
However, around 30 percent (of the two-thirds in the vocational track) remain in the so-
called transitional system preparing for a better education or employment; three-quarters
of them having lower or even no accredited education.
The latter observation clearly hints to serious flaws in the German system, in particular the
danger of over-specialisation and the exclusion of disadvantaged and vulnerable youth.25
But overall, the advantages prevail: On the one hand, such institutional bridges reduce
information deficits or information asymmetries through standardised and accredited
occupations or trades; and they provide, on the other hand, work experience that also helps
to build up confidence among young people, especially those with more practical than
theoretical talents. In Austria and Germany, the proportion of the youth population
combining work and training is 39 percent and 36 percent respectively, in Denmark and
the Netherlands, this proportion may even reach as high as 60 percent, albeit with a lower
share of work than in Austria and Germany (Eurofound 2014: 32). In contrast, countries
like France, Spain, Portugal, Italy or Greece with low proportions of youth combining
work and training face high youth unemployment even in boom periods because their
educational system concentrates on high formal or academic qualifications (Berlingieri et
al. 2014). These countries clearly lack skills and competences at the middle level that are
more market-oriented and allow a smooth transition from school to work. Furthermore,
“aapprenticeship” as a paradigm for dual learning systems aimed at smoothing the
transition from school to work is no longer restricted to continental European countries but
25 For a much deeper and rich analysis of dual education and learning systems in Germany and in international comparison see – among others – Biavaschi et al. (2012), Brzinsky-Fay (2011), Ebner (2012), Eichhorst et al. (2012), and Solga (2008); with an emphasis on the transferability of the German system of vocational training to other countries in general see Euler (2013); and in particular to India see Bertelsmann Stiftung (2014).
30
is increasingly being adopted (or at least positively re-considered) in the UK and USA,
however, under a rather different institutional context.26
Once again, I am not recommending that India copy the European apprenticeship systems
due to their specific histories and different institutional backgrounds. In fact, as
demonstrated, even the European systems differ considerably. Yet, these differences might
serve as a stimulus to concentrate on the principles of dual learning systems and to adjust
them to the Indian context. Moreover, it seems that this message has already been
embraced.27 The budget report of the Indian Ministry of Finance (2013: 50) sees “the time
has come” for establishing formal apprenticeships, in particular for the reason “to place
employers at the heart of education”, playing a more powerful role in imparting job-
relevant skills and also repairing, preparing and upgrading the labour force. The report
also correctly reports that formal apprenticeships can aid five important transitions that
the labour force is currently undergoing: from agriculture to non-agriculture agriculture,
from rural to urban, from the unorganised sector to the organised, from school to work,
and from subsistence self-employment to wage employment.
To this insight I can only add – from the European perspective – that the general and
theoretical elements of vocational training and education should not be neglected in order
to avoid the myopic skill demands of the market and to care for sustainable and
transferable skills. This also leads to the question of the actors and institutions that ensure
a proper balance between practical and theoretical knowledge, to which I turn in the next
section.
4.4 Mind the potential of SME and middle-level skills: Reward entrepreneurship and
vocational training
Markets are necessary but are not sufficient for solving the problem of youth
unemployment. The concept of TLM tries to combine both social coordination
26 For the UK see Speckesser and Montalt (2014); for the USA see Olinsky and Ayres (2013). Both studies emphasise that the benefits exceed the costs of respective investments by employers. 27 Again, I draw the reader’s attention to the excellent study by Maitra and Mani (2014).
31
mechanisms: the market and the state. It brings a market orientation into the formal
education system for the young by learning on the job and earning at market wages, and it
brings the state into the market by ensuring decent minimum wages, quality standards and
the public financing of schools and teachers. A recent study concentrating on the
European countries Portugal, Spain and Italy with high unemployment in particular among
high-educated students emphasises the role of the state in developing a legal framework
for the content and quality of the training provided by firms for each occupation. Existing
subsidies to employers for youth employment should be made conditional on participation
in such a certified apprenticeship scheme. This would give firms an incentive to contribute
to increasing the quality of vocational training (Berlingieri et al. 2014).
A flourishing ‘Mittelstand’, as it is called in Germany, with thriving small- and medium-
sized enterprises (SME), is an essential condition for utilising as well as for establishing a
healthy middle-level skill reservoir. Such an entrepreneurial infrastructure, however,
cannot be established from one day to the next. The three most important strategies would
be: an industrial policy supporting SME; a regulatory policy restricting casual and
informal jobs with wages and work conditions below decent standards; an education
policy providing skilled workers at the middle level, e.g. craft workers, engineers,
professional care and health workers, and – last but not least – good teachers.
Wages, however, also play a crucial intermediary role in bringing education, work and
earnings together. I am not familiar with wages or salaries according to age in India,
which might to some extent explain the much higher risk of unemployment for youth
compared to adults (see Table 1). Mainstream and neoclassical-oriented economists often
argue that getting rid of minimum wages for youth would solve the problem. At lower
wages, employers would be willing to hire more young people. But European experiences
show that minimum wages play, if at all, a minor role (Eurofound 2012: 45). One also has
to consider the discouraging effects of very low wages for young people, especially for
young adults who want to establish a family. Decent wages also ensure that employers do
not only attract skilled young people but that these people remain loyal, work hard and do
not opportunistically switch to the next job that pays a little more. Labour turnover may be
32
efficient, but too high a fluctuation is a waste of resources and kills mutual investments
and respective trust between employers and workers.
Some, not all, European experiences show that there are better functional equivalents for
just lowering wages. First, high formal education raises the reservation wages of young
people that might not correspond to the market realities. The TLM system of learning and
earning, however, mitigates this problem by paying only for the productive part of work
and not for learning on the job. So, there is risk sharing between employers and workers.
Furthermore, at work young people become acquainted with the market pay structure and
do not develop unrealistic high reservation wages. Second, and after the apprenticeship,
systems of wage coordination take into account the lower productivity of young people by
establishing relatively low entry levels of wages for the youth but providing at the same
time some security of a career perspective with respective increases of wages after
considerable work experience.
Finally, the principle of dual learning, which means systematically combining work and
education, is not restricted to the secondary or middle level. It can also be applied to the
academic or tertiary level which will be the subject of the last section.
4.5 Mind the dual learning principles also in higher education: Bring business and
academies together
In the low youth unemployment countries Austria, Germany and Switzerland business
colleges, vocational academies and industrial or applied universities play an increasing
role, and the graduates of these schools often have much better labour market chances than
graduates from pure academic institutions. As already noted, Austria and Switzerland, and
to some extent Denmark and the Netherlands,28 might even be better models for India
because they do not specialise too much, as Germany is currently doing. In Austria,
already 26 percent of youth aged around 16 attend full-time vocational colleges with
integrated practical experiences in firms (‘Berufliche Höhere Schulen’) providing both: a
licence for exercising a broadly defined occupation as well as the right to enter university 28 With the lowest NEET rates, see Figure 2A in Appendix.
33
(‘Matura’). In Switzerland, one-third of youth attend business colleges or universities of
applied sciences (‘Fachhochschulen’) that also require practical experiences from both the
teachers and the students. Both countries have better records than Germany in integrating
youth into the labour market at their acquired skill levels, and both countries also do better
for disadvantaged youth by ensuring some kind of accredited education that is
marketable.29
India should not give up its well-established academic education system which, in
international comparison, is clearly an asset. But this system might be improved by
stronger market orientation through establishing principles of dual education and learning.
Apart from the already mentioned dual business high schools or universities of applied
sciences in the German speaking countries, a possible model might also be the Baden-
Wuerttemberg Cooperative State University (founded in 2009) with its main seat in
Stuttgart, eight other locations in the region and four branch campuses. This university
integrates academic studies and work experience. Students regularly switch from their
academic studies at the university to practical training at their workplace training provider,
the so-called corporate partner; they are not only taught theoretical knowledge but they
also learn to apply this knowledge in practice. With around 34,000 enrolled students,
9,000 partner companies and more than 125,000 graduates, this university counts as one of
the largest higher education institutions in the Federal State of Baden-Wuerttemberg. The
official seat of the university is in Stuttgart. The students have an employment contract
and through the entire period they receive a monthly salary and have the insurance of
being an employee. Small classes of at most 30 students guarantee close supervision. The
university cooperates with numerous universities and enterprises worldwide. That makes it
possible for most of the degree programmes (business, engineering, and social work) to
include a training and education period abroad thereby responding to the increasing
demand for internationalisation. The students’ future prospects are excellent: roughly 90
29 Furthermore, as Olinsky and Ayres (2013: 23) emphasise, the model of dual learning systems is already more widespread than most people are aware. In the US (but also in Europe, GüS) nearly all medical doctors, for instance, participate in an apprenticeship of sorts (though it is not registered as such) during their internships and residencies where doctors receive on-the-job and classroom-based training while receiving a salary. The same principle can be applied to many other high-skilled occupations, not least in the growing areas of social service occupations.
34
percent of the students sign regular employment contracts with the companies after
graduation (www.dhbw.de).30
To sum up: prudent policy might tame the market and utilise thereby the dynamic forces
of markets for creating more and better jobs for youth. Establishing and extending TLMs,
which means dual systems of earning and learning, might thereby help. One step could be
to extend the conditional public support for private employers: The conditions can be
related to market as well as to social performance indicators, to workplace training, and to
including employers or community representatives on the boards of colleges and industrial
universities. Sweden, for instance, has even written into its constitution the obligation of
colleges and universities to make a contribution to regional economic development.
Furthermore, vocational academies, industrial colleges or applied universities could
provide to an increasing extent education and training for foreign students. Education
might even develop into a job-creation-machinery for teachers and trainers, something that
might be an objective for India’s education (and industrial) policy because the
internationalisation of the Indian university system does not yet seem to be well-
developed. For Europeans, at least, India has such a fascinating culture which could be
attractive to many young people hoping to gain experience and establish social relations.
Closer cooperation, for example, between German and Indian vocational academies seems
to be a worthwhile and rewarding policy ambition.
Outlook
What are the future prospects for youth unemployment? The Danish Nobel prize winner
Nils Bohr once said: “It is hard to predict, especially the future.” Too much depends on
too many single decisions. However, at least one thing seems to be sure, because the
respective ‘decisions’ have already been made: Demography or birth rates. Progressively
shrinking cohorts in Europe, in particular in Germany, will have dramatic effects on the
30 The Republic of Korea seems to have followed this model: Youth Employment Academies have been set up to promote youth employment through training courses reflecting demand at industrial sites. Business or employers’ organisations can set up a youth employment academy in cooperation with colleges, while the operating costs of the academy are supported by the Ministry of Employment and Labour (OECD/ILO 2014: 12).
35
number of entrants to the future labour market over the next 15 to 30 years. In this respect,
India is unique in enjoying a demographic dividend (Ministry of Finance 2013) where
more than 50 per cent of its population is in the working age group of 15 to 59 and 28 per
cent in the age group 15–29. It is expected that by the year 2020 more than 65 per cent of
the Indian population will be in the working age group with a majority of young adults
(Sanghi and Srija 2014). In Europe, the relative share of the working age population (20–
64) will fall from about 61 percent (2010) to about 57 percent (2030), whereas the relative
share of young people aged 20 to 29 in this group will drop considerably according to
population projections.31 So, youth unemployment in Europe might be less of a problem in
10 years than the lack of skilled people, due to demographic reasons; India, on the other
hand, might face an even worse situation of youth unemployment if it does not succeed in
investing more in its education and training system, however, in particular by
strengthening the link between the education and the labour market system.
Certainly, job creation – above all in rural areas – will be the main challenge for India as
far as I can guess from the European perspective. However, much depends also on
creating the right skills. And here I come back to the ‘academic inflation’ of skills, which
can be observed more or less in all countries, unfortunately not least in the poorer
developing countries. What is the explanation for this inflation? I believe that one
important reason is the parents’ aspiration to get their children the best education they can
have. This is understandable but obviously cannot work for all: Individually, this
aspiration is rational; but collectively it is non-rational – creating congestion,
disappointment or even desperation.
What is the reason behind this aspiration? I believe that these preferences are – among
other obvious motives like cultural thrive – strongly driven by an insurance motive. A
high standard of formal education is still the best insurance device to end up in a high-paid
job with a high social security. So, and this may sound like a provocation for many
Indians, one solution for this problem of ‘academic inflation’ and respective high youth 31 I apologise for the incongruence oft the data. It is surprisingly hard to get comparable figures for demographic projections. The first figure for Europe (EU-27) concerning working age population is taken from Beblavý et al. (2014: calculated from Table 3.1, p. 31); the second figure concerning youth is derived from population projections by the European Commission (2009, Table A 9, p. 12).
36
unemployment would be to moderate these aspirations by establishing a better social
security system for all, especially for the many of those who are still not at all or not
sufficiently covered by health, disability, unemployment and pension insurance (Drèze
and Sen 2013: 182–212). If such a safety net existed, many more young people would
probably be happy to aspire and to take the risk of jobs at the lower or middle end of the
labour market – provided that wages and work conditions are decent and that the doors
remain open for them when they plan to receive higher education and better jobs later
during their life course.
From this point of view – and considering the developing countries, in particular Africa
and Asia – the global problem of youth unemployment will probably be more dramatic for
the next 10 to 20 years than today.32 Confronted with this challenge, the wise words of the
French writer Antoine de Saint-Exupéry should be remembered: “As for the future, your
task is not to foresee it, but to enable it.”
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40
Appendix
Table 1A: Indicators of Youth Unemployment in Europe
Abbr. Country 1 2 3 4 5 IS Iceland 9.4 7.0* 3.2 2.9 7.8*
NO Norway 8.7 7.0* 2.5 3.5 8.4* SE Sweden 24.1 7.8 5.6 4.3 8.4 FI Finland 19.6 8.6 6.6 3.0 10.4 IE Ireland 25.4 18.7 10.8 2.4 21.3 UK Great Britain 20.0 14.0 5.1 3.9 15.4 DK Denmark 13.0 6.6 5.8 1.9 8.2 EE Estonia 22.7 12.5 7.8 2.9 22.6 LV Latvia 23.5 14.1 10.3 2.3 13.9 LT Lithuania 20.4 11.1 10.1 2.2 17.1 NL Netherlands 11.4 4.3 6.1 1.9 6.2 BE Belgium 23.8 12.3 7.1 3.4 14.4 FR France 25.5 12.2 9.2 2.8 15.0 DE Germany 7.7 7.7 4.8 1.6 9.6 PL Poland 27.4 11.8 8.5 3.2 15.7 CZ Czech Republic 19.2 8.9 5.3 3.6 12.9 SK Slovakia 32.9 13.8 12.4 2.6 18.8 HU Hungary 25.1 14.7 8.1 3.1 18.8 AT Austria 9.7 6.5 4.3 2.3 7.8 SW Switzerland 8.5 8.0* 2.9 1.2 9.6* SL Slovenia 23.3 9.3 8.8 2.5 11.8 HR Croatia 49.8 16.7 15.6 3.2 18.8 BG Bulgaria 28.9 21.5 11.8 2.5 17.3 RO Romania 23.6 16.1 5.9 4.0 19.1 EL Greece 58.9 20.3 25.7 2.3 27.1 IT Italy 41.7 21.1 10.7 3.9 23.9 ES Spain 55.3 18.8 23.9 2.3 22.6 PO Portugal 34.8 14.1 13.9 2.5 15.9 CY Cyprus 40.3 16.0 14.7 2.7 17.3 TU Turkey 16.2 25.0* 9.0 1.8 29.2*
EU EU-28/27 23.4 13.2 9.4 1.8 15.9
(1) Unemployed youth in age15-24 as percent of youth labour force (employed + unemployed) in age 15-24; November 2013; source for EU-Member States: Eurofound (2014); for the other countries OECD-Statistics. (2) NEET = Youth 15-24 neither in employment nor in education or training as percent of youth population aged 15-24; year 2012; source for EU-MS see (1); * OECD, Education at a Glance 2014. (3) Unemployment rates of adults aged 25-74, source see (1). (4) = (1)/(3), i.e. proportion of youth unemployment in relation to adult unemployment. (5) NEET = Youth 15-29 neither in employment nor in education or training as percent of youth population aged 15-29; year 2012; source for EU-MS see (1); * OECD, Education at a Glance 2014.
41
Figure 1A:
Youth Unemployment Rates in EuropeUnemployed youths (14-25) as percent of youth labour force, November 2013
< 10 %< 20 %< 30 %< 40 %≥ 40 %
7.7
9.78.5
55.3
58.9
11.4
41.7
16.2
20.0
25.5
27.4
24.18.7
19.6
13.0
INDIA: ≈ 11%EUROPE: 23.4%
25.4
34.8
32.9
28.9
23.8
23.6
22.7
23.5
20.4
9.4
19.2
25.1
49.823.3
40.3
Source: see Table 1A and NSSO (2014)
Figure 2A:
Youth-NEET-Rates: Neither in employment nor education or training(15-29, as percent of youth population, November 2013)
< 10 %< 15 %< 20 %< 25 %≥ 25 %
7.8
8.48.4
10.4
21.3
15.4
8.2
22.6
13.9
17.1
6.2
14.4
15.0
9.615.7
12.918.8
18.87.89.6
11.8
18.8
17.3
19.1
27.1
23.9
22.615.9
17.3
29.2
EUROPE: 15.2 %
INDIA: ≈ 28 %
Source: see Table 1A and NSSO (2014)
42
Figure 3A: Youth-NEET-Rates (15-29) in OECD Countries According to Educational Attainment
Source: OECD 2014: Education at a Glance
43
Figure 4A: Average Youth Unemployment Rates, NEET-rates, Average Relative Youth Unemployment Rates, and Average Relative Shares of Unemployment by Dual Systems of Learning in OECD-Countries 1990-2012
12th September 2013 C. Brzinsky-Fay & C. Ebner 13
2. Measures of labour market exclusion
510
1520
1995 2000 2005 2010 20151995 2000 2005 2010 20151995 2000 2005 2010 2015
no partly yes
(mea
n) n
eet1
5_29
year
Average yearly NEET rates by dual system
11.
52
2.5
1990 2000 2010 1990 2000 2010 1990 2000 2010
no partly yes
(mea
n) re
lyue
ryear
Average relative youth unemployment rates by dual system
510
1520
25
1990 2000 2010 1990 2000 2010 1990 2000 2010
no partly yes
(mea
n) u
er15
_24
year
Average youth unemployment rates by dual system
11.
21.
41.
6
1990 2000 2010 1990 2000 2010 1990 2000 2010
no partly yes
(mea
n) re
lsha
re
year
Average relative share of unemployment by dual system
Source: C. Brzinsky and C. Ebner, September 2013
Source: Brzinsky-Fay and Ebner (2013).
44
Figure 5A: Employment Protection and Relative Youth Unemployment: A First Glance
12
34
0 1 2 3 4 5EPL, individual and collective dismissals (regular contracts), version 1
Source: Brzinsky-Fay and Ebner (2013).
45
Figure 6A: Employment Protection and Relative Youth Unemployment – A Second Glance
12
34
0 5 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 1.5 2 2.5 3
no partly yes
EPL, individual and collective dismissals (regular contracts), version 1
Relative youth unemployment and EPL, by dual system
Source: Brzinsky-Fay and Ebner (2013).
46
Figure 7A: Economic Costs of NEETs in Europe as share of GDP, 2011
Source: Eurofound 2012: 80 (Note: Figures in the text relate to the most recent calculations by Eurofound 2014; the country structure remains the same).